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  1. I'll tell you this. No eternal reward will forgive us now for wasting the dawn. I'll tell you 'bout Texas radio and the Big Beat. Soft, driven, slow and mad, like some new language. Now, listen to this, and I'll tell you 'bout the Texas. I'll tell you 'bout the Texas radio. I'll tell you 'bout the hopeless night. Wandering the Western dream.

  2. Recorded June 5, 1957 (Wednesday)(w&m: Antoine "Fats" Domino/Dave Bartholomew)Fats' 1st recording from his 44th session (IM-1357).b-side of "I Want You To Kn...

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    • Fats-4-Ever
  3. Feb 28, 2013 · The Prodigy – “Smack My Bitch Up” from The Fat of the Land (1997; Maverick-XL). After critically acclaimed twists on house music and rave culture, this crew from Braintree helped define big beat’s mix of techno and breakbeat with hard industrial elements, expanding on the efforts of 1993’s Music for the Jilted Generation with 1997’s monstrous The Fat of the Land.

  4. Jan 5, 2024 · The Creation of “The WASP (Texas Radio and the Big Beat)”. Originally, “The WASP (Texas Radio and the Big Beat)” was a poem written by Jim Morrison in 1968, entitled “Texas Radio.”. He would often recite this poem during The Doors’ live performances as a way to break from the traditional structure of their music and showcase his ...

  5. In the first video feature from Tale of the Tape, "The Big Beat" pays tribute to the Big Apple.

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    • Official Billy Squier
  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › The_Big_BeatThe Big Beat - Wikipedia

    The Big Beat may refer to: The Big Beat (Art Blakey album), 1960. The Big Beat (Machinations album), 1986. The Big Beat (Johnnie Ray album), 1957. The Big Beat, a 1990 album by Holloee Poloy, with Edyta Bartosiewicz. "The Big Beat", 1958 song and hit single by Fats Domino B-side of "I Want You to Know". "The Big Beat" (song), a 1980 song by ...

  7. Apple Music. Big beat—an expression of ’90s dance music at its most crowd-pleasingly boisterous—was always upfront about its intentions. Its philosophy was right there in the name: The bigger the beats, the better. Coldcut and M/A/R/R/S lay the foundation in the late ’80s, fusing acid house and turntablism with infectious hooks.

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